NWSL was forced into a reckoning a year ago as a report from The
Athletic outlined allegations of sexual abuse by former North
Carolina Courage head coach Paul Riley, after speaking to more
than a dozen players he had coached since 2010.
The Athletic said Riley denied "the majority" of the
allegations.
The fallout engulfed the league, prompting the departure of
former Commissioner Lisa Baird and demands for reform, while
half of the NWSL teams parted ways with their head coaches over
player complaints before the end of the 2021 season.
U.S. Soccer brought in U.S. Deputy Attorney General Sally Q.
Yates and King & Spalding LLP to conduct the independent inquiry
and released the full findings.
"Our investigation has revealed a league in which abuse and
misconduct - verbal and emotional abuse and sexual misconduct
-had become systemic, spanning multiple teams, coaches, and
victims," the Yates' report said.
U.S. Soccer founded the NWSL in 2012 and operated as manager,
providing logistical and financial support, through 2020. It
continues to provide oversight over the league.
The Yates report said the league, its teams and U.S. Soccer
failed to put in "basic measures" for player safety at the
NWSL's inception, or "respond appropriately when confronted with
player reports and evidence of abuse."
"DEEPLY TROUBLING"
U.S. Soccer said it would move immediately to implement reforms
and President Cindy Parlow Cone called the investigation's
findings "heartbreaking and deeply troubling."
"The abuse described is inexcusable," said Parlow Cone. "U.S.
Soccer is fully committed to doing everything in its power to
ensure that all players - at all levels - have a safe and
respectful place to learn, grow and compete."
The NWSL said it would immediately review the findings.
A joint investigation between the league and its players'
association is ongoing.
"We greatly appreciate our players, staff and stakeholders'
cooperation with both investigations, especially during the
ongoing season," the league said in a statement.
"We recognize the anxiety and mental strain that these pending
investigations have caused and the trauma that many – including
players and staff – are having to relive."
The Yates report said that allegations of abuse in the league
were made available to the NWSL and U.S. Soccer long before they
came to light in The Athletic report.
The 172-page independent report said coaches accused of abuse
were able to move from club to club because teams, the NWSL and
U.S. Soccer "failed to identify misconduct and inform others."
The report recommended a variety of reforms aimed at boosting
accountability and transparency, including a requirement for
misconduct to be disclosed.
"Abuse in the NWSL is rooted in a deeper culture in women’s
soccer that normalizes verbally abusive coaching and blurs
boundaries between coaches and players," Yates said in a
statement.
U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal, who chairs the Senate Commerce
subcommittee with oversight over American Olympic and amateur
athletes, called it a "damning report" and said he would push
for Congressional hearings.
"This report reveals appalling and abhorrent systemic abuse in
U.S. women’s professional soccer," he said in a statement.
"Years of complaints about sexual misconduct, verbal abuse, and
other completely inappropriate conduct against female soccer
players were met with little to no action from teams, the
League, or the Federation."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York; Editing by Ken Ferris)
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